Lämlinhaus

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The former Lämlinhaus in Talheim

The Lämlinhaus in Talheim in the Heilbronn district is the former office of the Teutonic Order , former rectory of the Protestant parish of Talheim and today a cultural monument . It is located in the center of Talheim, directly on the old town hall square.

history

The original building was built or rebuilt in 1571, as evidenced by a date in a stone. The builder was the Lämlin family , who moved from Heilbronn to Talheim in 1470 . The initials of previous owners can still be seen today above a representative entrance portal from 1585 : Gottfried Lämlin († 1585) and his wife Ursula von Wöllwarth († 1587).

After the builder's death, Gottfried's cousin, Philipp Christoph Lämlin († 1596), and his first wife, Anna Maria von Venningen († 1585) inherited his property and thus also the building.

In 1606 Valentin Lämlin , the son of Philipp and Anna Maria, sold the house to the Teutonic Order . This used it as an office building . Almost 200 years later, in 1805, the Teutonic Order was expropriated as part of the secularization , and the house passed to the Kingdom of Württemberg , which is still evidenced by a Württemberg coat of arms with a royal crown above the portal.

The Renaissance building stood empty from 1805 to 1811 . Then it was left to the Protestant parish, which almost completely demolished it in 1883 and replaced it with a new building. Only the entrance portal, the coat of arms and the stone with the year have been preserved and integrated into the back. Until 1984 it was still used as a rectory.

Today the house is privately owned.

literature

  • H [olde]. u. Lockpick]. G [aa] .: Talheimer small monuments: coat of arms, initials and dates on the former Lämlinhaus (Hauptstrasse 3). In: Mitteilungsblatt Talheim , edition 6/2010, p. 16

Web links

Commons : Lämlinhaus (Talheim)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 49 ° 4 ′ 57.4 "  N , 9 ° 11 ′ 48.8"  E